Reny Alfonsoโs favorite catch phrase โ โDoes not suck yo!โ โ could apply to his career choice.
He almost had to become a chef.
โMy grandmother, I remember vividly, every week we would pick a different country we were learning about and she would make something from that country,โ says Alfonso, director of operations at Celtic Crossing and Bog & Barley.
Born in San Josรฉ, Costa Rica, Alfonso remembers his grandmother making โstraight-up paellaโ from Spain one time. โWhen we did the United States, she made apple pie.โ
Alfonso loved being in the kitchen. โIโve always liked the heart of where all the parties were.โ
His fatherโs best friend, who held all-day cookouts at his house, taught Alfonso how to grill. โIt would start out with sausage on the grill. And youโd eat that with some bread and some chimichurri. Someone would throw on some sweet breads and some octopus after that. A short rib would go on. Then a prime rib.
โThe kids would be in the pool swimming and Iโd be on the grill.โ
Alfonsoโs first restaurant job was Markโs on the Grove in Coral Gables, Florida. One night, his brother-in-law couldnโt pick him up after work. โThe chef said he would take me home. On the way home, we went to a bar. And I stood there at a bar having a beer with all the cooks and shit. And I said, โI definitely want to do this for the rest of my life.โ
โFor me, it was almost like finding a second family. A bunch of people with one direction and one goal. And just having a good time doing it at the same time.โ
Alfonso, who went to culinary school at Johnson & Wales University – North Miami, worked his way through some of the top restaurants in Florida and New York.
In 2005, he became executive chef of Chez Philippe at The Peabody. โWe changed the menu, the whole format, to a French-Asian concept.โ
He began doing charcuterie after a trip to Austria, where he watched The Peabodyโs pastry chef Konrad Spitzbartโs family cure meat. โI converted my house in Mud Island to a cure room. I had two cure boxes set up in my garage, three set up in The Peabody, and then I built a giant smoker in the garage at my house for cold smoking.โ
The Chez Philippe menu featured โwhatever was coming out of the cure box at the time of service. We did from snout to tail.โ
In 2010, Alfonso moved to Philadelphia to work for Starr Restaurants for the next decade.
Alfonsoโs friend DJ Naylor, who owns Celtic Crossing, told him his new restaurant idea. โHe always had a dream to build something bigger than what a traditional Irish pub would be, but still with the heart and feel of an Irish pub.โ
In 2021, Naylor and Alfonso began working on Naylorโs dream restaurant: Bog & Barley. โโBogโ is โfrom the earth.โ And โbarleyโ is for the whiskey aspect.
โThe idea I had for this is, โYes, itโs an Irish restaurant. And, yes, we have Irish dishes on the menu. But I donโt want to do them the way theyโre stereotypically portrayed.โ I had managed so many different restaurants over the last 10, 15 years, I wanted to incorporate a little bit of what I learned at those restaurants.โ
Alfonso keeps a little bit of Ireland in his non-Irish dishes. โI took steak au poivre and, instead of using brandy, weโre using Irish whiskey in the sauce. For the pork porterhouse, Iโve got an Irish cider glaze on it.โ
Alfonse hired Joel Lemay as Bog & Barleyโs executive chef and Max Williams as Celtic Crossingโs executive chef. โIโm in the kitchen with both of them.โ
Alfonso doesnโt want Bog & Barley to be stuffy. โThis restaurant, as fancy as it may look, is not a fancy restaurant. You can come in whenever you want and have whatever you want. Itโs affordable.โ
The restaurant is โapproachable on a regular basis, not just a special occasion.โ
Bog & Barley is at 6150 Poplar Avenue, Suite 124, in Regalia Shopping Center.

